Reichlingia leopoldii

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Reichlingia leopoldii
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Ascomycota
Class: Arthoniomycetes
Order: Arthoniales
Family: Arthoniaceae
Genus: Reichlingia
Species:
R. leopoldii
Binomial name
Reichlingia leopoldii
Diederich & Scheid. (1996)

Reichlingia leopoldii is a species of lichen-forming fungus (a lichenised hyphomycete) in the family Arthoniaceae.[1] It forms greyish-green patches up to several centimetres across on hard siliceous rocks such as basalt, often in sheltered overhangs and crevices. The fungus reproduces asexually through distinctive chocolate-brown, branched spores that develop on the thallus surface, and no sexual reproductive structures are known. In continental Europe the species is rare and scattered, occurring mainly on the bark of veteran oaks in long-established woodlands from the Netherlands and Belgium eastward to Poland, Lithuania and Russia. In Britain it is known only from a few rock localities in eastern Scotland, while elsewhere it has been recorded from primeval beech forests in the Carpathians.

Reichlingia leopoldii was described as new to science in 1996 by Paul Diederich and Christoph Scheidegger. The type specimen was collected by Volkmar Wirth in Epfendorf, Germany, where it was growing on the trunk of an old tree. The species epithet honours Léopold Reichling; the authors dedicated the name to him "on the occasion of his 75th birthday".[2] The fungus was originally interpreted as a lichenicolous fungus growing on an unidentified host lichen with a trentepohlioid green algal photobiont. Subsequent work has treated it instead as a lichenised hyphomycete, that is, a lichen-forming fungus known only in its asexual conidial stage. Among lichenised and lichenicolous hyphomycetes that produce dark brown, warted (verrucose) conidia, R. leopoldii is characterised by its greyish green, often cottony thallus that is irregularly covered, except near the margin, with chocolate-brown, multicellular, branched conidia. Superficially similar species of the facultatively lichenised Milospium graphideorum have sharply delimited, roundish conidiomata and aseptate, irregularly lobed conidia with a swollen wall, while species of Sclerococcum (in the loose sense) likewise have discrete round conidiomata but conidia that are aseptate to multicellular and always more or less spherical.[3] By the early 21st century it was regarded as one of a small group of lichen-forming hyphomycetes in which the thallus and the dark, powdery conidia always occur together, a view that is now widely adopted.[4]

Description

Habitat and distribution

References

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